COASTAL OBSERVATION AND SEABIRD SURVEY TEAM Pomarine Jaeger, Glaucous Gull, and Arctic Tern. And Ken’s June 2010 survey grossed three finds nobody else found this biennium: Common Eider, Red-breasted Merganser and Semipalmated Plover (first-ever COASST record). The Chukchi Sea, sandwiched between the Arctic Ocean and the Bering Sea, is a tricky place to survey because the ocean surface freezes September through May (or later). Even in June Ken has noted, “shore ice that has broken up packed in towards the beach due to northwest winds. Plenty of wave action outside of the ice, but minimal on shore.” With Ken’s foothold in Shishmaref and Jane’s training trip to Kotzebue (inspired by Charlotte Westing and Meghan Nedwick in August 2011), COASST’s northern- most region now boasts nine beaches in 2012, including Churchrock, accessed by Randy Meyers and Jim Dau in a beach-landing plane! Recovering from the largest algal bloom ever recorded in the world, we’ve combined 2009–2011 into a single report—two for one this year! Despite COASST finding more than 700 scoters between September and November 2009, they still weren’t top dog—that title belongs to Northern Fulmars. Still, 2009–2011 was our birdiest bien- nium yet, with 9,667 carcasses found by 797 participants. ALASKA Chukchi Every region starts with one beach: in the summer of 2009, Julia extended COASST into the Chukchi Sea, where “rare” species (to all of us who live south of 50°N) are pretty commonplace. Just ask Ken Stenek, science teacher at Shishmaref School—McKay’s Buntings? They’re at the top of Ken’s birding list for 2011. His first month of COASST finds included Greater White-fronted Goose, Sarichef West—COASST’s northernmost beach, on the shores of the Chukchi Sea. Photo: K. Stenek Breaking News Reports 09–11
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C o a s ta l o b s e r v at i o n a n d s e a b i r d s u r v e y t e a m
Pomarine Jaeger, Glaucous Gull, and Arctic Tern. And Ken’s June 2010 survey grossed three finds nobody else found this biennium: Common Eider, Red-breasted Merganser and Semipalmated Plover (first-ever COASST record).
The Chukchi Sea, sandwiched between the Arctic Ocean and the Bering Sea, is a tricky place to survey because the ocean surface freezes September through May (or later). Even in June Ken has noted, “shore ice that has broken up packed in towards the beach due to northwest winds. Plenty of wave action outside of the ice, but minimal on shore.”
With Ken’s foothold in Shishmaref and Jane’s training trip to Kotzebue (inspired by Charlotte Westing and Meghan Nedwick in August 2011), COASST’s northern-most region now boasts nine beaches in 2012, including Churchrock, accessed by Randy Meyers and Jim Dau in a beach-landing plane!
Recovering from the largest algal bloom ever recorded in the world, we’ve combined 2009–2011 into a single report—two for one this year! Despite COASST finding more than 700 scoters between September and November 2009, they still weren’t top dog—that title belongs to Northern Fulmars. Still, 2009–2011 was our birdiest bien-nium yet, with 9,667 carcasses found by 797 participants.
alasKa ChukchiEvery region starts with one beach: in the summer of 2009, Julia extended COASST into the Chukchi Sea, where “rare” species (to all of us who live south of 50°N) are pretty commonplace. Just ask Ken Stenek, science teacher at Shishmaref School—McKay’s Buntings? They’re at the top of Ken’s birding list for 2011. His first month of COASST finds included Greater White-fronted Goose,
Sarichef West—COASST’s northernmost beach,
on the shores of the Chukchi Sea. Photo: K. StenekBreaking News
Auke RecBoy Scout BeachCowee Creek/False Outer PtDouglas Pt SWEagle BeachShrine of St ThereseWhiting Inlet
Airport BeachFourth of July SouthSeward WaterfrontSpring CreekTonsina
John Brown’s Beach Kruzof KamenoiKruzof SEKruzof SWSeamart to SandySitka Historic Park
Buggy Beach Refuge Cove
Cannon Beach NCannon Beach S
Sarichef ESarichef W
East Beach
Anchor River S Anchor River St RecBarge Basin N Bishop’s Beach EBishop’s Beach MidBishop’s Beach WCannery NCoal BayHarbor Mouth Homer Spit Mid Kenai NLand’s EndMariner ParkMiller’s LandingMud BayPeterson Bay Southwest Stretch
bering seaPlane-to-beach sounds familiar, at least to Lucretia Fairchild, Kristine Sowl and Audrey Bohl at Cape Glazenap, which turned up two Ancient Murrelets in 2009. Part of the Alcid family, Ancients are the only member with a cream-colored bill and a “tiny wing, dark upper, and all-white under,” aptly described by this intrepid team.
Tinier still, a Least Auklet showed up in August 2010 on Zappa Beach, St George Island, found by Slade Sapora and Allyson Larned, of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge seasonal staff. Like many diminutive seabirds, these guys are specialists on equally small prey items that “fit the bill”—copepods—mini, oceanic insect-cousins.
Neither dainty nor rare, but a strong signal on many COASST beaches, Northern Fulmars and Short-tailed Shear-waters had a good showing on St Paul Island, July–August 2009, but were completely absent in the summer of 2010. Paul Melovidov, Dustin Jones and Samantha Zacharof don’t see the same peak in fulmars that COASSTers from
Washington to California routinely document. Come Sep-tember, resident birds jet out of the “land of the midnight sun.”
aleutian islandsKyle Morrison and Ray Bucheit, Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge seasonal staff, found two first-year birds on their June 2009 survey of Buldir Transect A that challenged their COASST ID skills. The first, an immature Tufted Puffin, appeared nearly identical to a Horned Puffin with its white breast, but the dark face and bill curvature proved otherwise. As an immature, the Red-faced Cormorant they found lacked the diagnostic red facial skin behind the eye, but had a pale bill with dark tip.
Close cousins of Common Murres, but breeding farther North (Southeast to Chukchi Sea), Thick-billed Murres outnumbered Commons as beached birds 11:1 in the Aleutians. In the Gulf of Alaska it was just the opposite, with 10 Commons and no Thick-bills. When lumped, the two species (distinguishable by bill only) account for about 13%
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of finds this biennium in Alaska. By contrast, murres on the outer coast (Washington south to Humboldt) accounted for exactly one quarter of all finds.
Gulf of alaskaOn the hunt for a beached bird (murre or otherwise), Mark Kansteiner didn’t see a single one in September 2010 on Airport Beach, but did find “hundreds of moon jellies, approximately 1-inch in diameter, 100 larger moon jellies, plus another 100 lion’s mane jellies.” In response to concerns about increasing reports of jelly blooms, also know as “smacks,” scientists associated with the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis launched JellyWatch.org to create an online portal for citizens to post their sightings.
Jellies abound, but so do sightings of our national bird: anywhere from three, spotted by Kathy East on Cannery Beach North in May 2011, to the “33 BAEA within 500 feet of the start of my COASST segment” reported by Michelle Michaud on Anchor River South. The only Bald Eagle beached bird find washed up far from civilization, on Northwestern Spit, found by Kenai Fjords National Park staff Brooke McFarland, Laura Phillips and Monika Parsons in May 2011.
Following in the footsteps of Max Smith and Sarah Swanson, whose 2006 wedding invitation spoke of their gratitude toward “family and friends for joining us on this
most special occasion at our favorite place to walk, relax and survey dead birds,” Bruce Dotterer proposed to Meghan Kelly after completing their June 13, 2009 survey. Bruce offered a very surprised Meghan an engagement ring and he happily reports in the comment section, “She said, ‘Yes!’”
southeastHeidi and Tim Olson (along with an entourage of four guests) found Boy Scout Beach’s first bird since they started in October 2008 (well, there was that Dunlin Merrill Jensen found—close, but not quite dead). The team was first to admit, “it had been two years since our training,” but back at the house, they combed over the wing key and photos and came up with the correct species ID, a Common Loon. Not only that, they noted a classic oil “bathtub” ring on the remaining breast feathers.
Judy Ramos, anthropologist for the Yakutat Tlingit Tribe, found Southeast’s other loon, a Pacific, on Cannon Beach South in October 2010. Nary a bird on the north end, but Denise Wiltse and John Buller report plenty of “bear tracks observed” over multiple months.
As “lone man standing” in Ketchikan, Gary Freitag spread some COASST cheer and recruited Jessica Davila to adopt surveys of Refuge Cove. Now, with more than 10 surveys under her belt (as of fall 2011), they’re tied for total number of birds found (0!).
Look carefully! While this bird has a pale belly, it’s not a
Horned Puffin; it’s a juvenile Tufted Puffin found on Buldir
Island in June 2009. Contrast this bird to the one at right.
K. M
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Check out the beaks of both puffins, especially the bill tip: the
Tufted Puffin’s (left) forms a sideways heart shape, the Horned
Puffin’s (above), a dark triangle.
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Duk PointEllen CreekFirst BeachHobuck BeachHole in the WallNorwegian MemorialRialto JettySand Point NSand Point SSecond BeachShi ShiSooes NSooes SWa-atchWedding Rocks
Cranberry Rd NCranberry Rd S Klipsan Beach Long Beach-143rd N North Head Lighthouse NNorth Head Lighthouse S North Jetty to Cape DNorth Surfside Ocean Park MidOcean Park N Ocean Park SSeaviewSouth Letterhead A South Surfside
Damon NDamon Point E Damon Point WJake’s BeachMarine View DriveNorth JettyOC State Park NOcean CitySouth Butterclam South ChanceSouth DamonSouth OceanSouth PacificSouth Taurus
Beckett PointCape GeorgeCape George SDiamond Pt EDiamond Pt NGray’s MarshJohn Wayne MarinaPort WilliamsPort Williams NThompson SpitThree CrabsTravis SpitWest Sequim Bay
Crescent BayEdiz HookElwha WEnnis CreekFreshwater BayHollywood BeachMorse CreekTongue PtWhiskey Creek
CannonballDeep CreekHoko W Island ViewLyre CreekMiddle PtSekiu River WShipwreck PtSlip PtTwin River
Dune Grayland N Half Moon BayJacobsen Jetty S Midway Twin HarborsWesthaven
Chambers BayEvergreenKopachuck SPMenard’s LandingPriest PtPurdy Spit Rensland CreekSunnysideTitlowTolmie Park ETolmie Park WTwanoh SP Walker County Pk
Fay Bainbridge Fort WardHawley CoveIndianolaKingston FerryLynwood CenterManchester SPManzanitaPoint Julia NPoint Julia SPoint White Pomeroy ParkRockaway Beach
Kayak PtMission Beach TulareWarm Beach
Brackett’s LandingCarkeek Park Edmonds Marina Golden Gardens Howarth PkMeadowdale MukilteoPicnic PtRichmond Beach
Browns Point Dash Point St PkDumas Bay ParkSaltwater St Pk
Aleck Bay American Camp Beach Camp Orkila Crescent Beach Deadman BayEagle CoveFalse Bay Grandma’s CoveGriffin Bay Hughes Bay Indian Beach Jackson BeachJohn’s Pass
Ala Spit Bust PtBush Pt S Cama BeachCountry Club N Country Club S Coupeville Deception Pass N Deception Pass W Double Bluff Ebeys LandingElger Bay English Boom Preserve Fort Casey Fort Ebey St Pk Freeland Park Hastie Lake Rd S Joseph Whidbey SP Keystone Spit N Keystone Spit S Lagoon Point S Ledgewood Beach NLong Beach N Madrona Maxwelton Mutiny Sands North LagoonPerego’s LagoonPossession BeachPratt Bluff Rocky Point South Madrona Summerland Sunset Beach 2Useless Bay
Lonesome CoveNorth Mail Bay Otis Perkins Pearl IslandPoint HammondPresident’s Channel NSouth Beach WSouth Obstruction Watmough Bay West Obstruction Westsound Yellow Island
Foulweather BluffOlympusPoint No PointScenic Beach SPSeabeck NShine Tidelands SPSilverdale WaterfrontStavis Bay
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WasHinGtonPuget soundIn the chase to add the most new species to the COASST list, Puget Sound won this biennium, but none of the newbies was a seabird. Coming the closest was the “fish hawk,” or Osprey, found by Vic Nelson at Point No Point in August 2009. As testament to what 228 surveys will get you, Vic also turned up another first, a Mourning Dove in July 2010.Elizabeth Cumming-O’Berry and Tom Richards are losing beachfront, “continued erosion near the road—three more trees are tipping just over the cobble,” but grossing lots of birds on March Point: 13 beached birds this biennium, including COASST’s first Tree Swallow in June 2009.
UW Bothell students Sarah Gielgens and Mandy Knudtson, surveying Mukilteo in April as part of their community-based learning and research experience, tallied one bird: “Perching bird, varied plumage: songbird. Use traditional guide.” Our top-notch verifier Charlie Wright identified COASST’s fourth new species, a House Sparrow.
“Noticed diamond-shaped metal tags nailed on two different logs high on the beach. The tags read Fisheries Research—Do Not Tamper—2007, numbered 0690 and 0102, respectively,” wrote Matt and Bonnie Kerschaum on their January 2010 and 2011 surveys of Ala Spit. The study, lead by Dan Tonnes of NOAA Fisheries–Northwest Fisheries Science Center tracks movement of large woody debris critical for salmon habitat.
san JuansKim Des Rochers was the first to spot horse tracks on Camp Orkila Beach in April 2010. In May 2009, she found the beach’s first and only bird, a Common Loon—no head—but displaying the diagnostic, flattened tarsus and dark spotted upperwing.
Of the 11 birds found in the San Juans over the biennium, 4 were on two beaches—a rarity—all occurring in July or August. Mike Kaill holds the all-time record—3 Common Murres on Eagle Cove in August 2003. Coming in close behind recently were Debbie Clausen and Kim Sundberg with 2 perching birds in August 2009 and Karla Sabin with a Cassin’s Auklet and a Common Murre in August 2010.
Hughes Bay is always abuzz with live birds seen from the shoreline. Daphne Morris and Cathy Wilson keep watch in the hopes of spotting the occasional Common Goldeneye. It wasn’t a bird, but a feline that surprised them in February
2010, “1 cat, alive and well,” which marked COASST’s first-ever cat on beach patrol.
Tim Easton and Andrea Wieland also keep an eye out for live birds. The team spotted large flocks of Surf Scoters just off American Camp in October 2010 and May 2011, timed, not surprisingly, with the birds’ arrival to, and departure from, Pacific Northwest waters.
straitPigeon Guillemots of many plumages dotted the pages of Strait data sheets—breeding, non-breeding and those in-between. Relatively well adapted to human activities, the greater Puget Sound’s second most abundant resident seabird fledges chicks in late July and early August from natural and man-made structures like wharfs, bridges, navigation aids, pipes and even beached ship hulls! The wrack of Diamond Point North turned up a transitional plumaged PIGU for Karen Gittleman, Judy Rost and Jan Kummet in September 2009. Marilyn Friederich and Vicki Mansfield found a breeding PIGU on McCurdy Point in August 2010; Nancy Messmer found an immature on Hoko West in October 2010.
Janet and Robert Mullen found one of the state’s rarer birds, a Marbled Murrelet, on Dungeness Spit Mile 2-3 in July 2009. The MAMU, along with a Pelagic Cormorant, White-winged Scoter and Northern Fulmar, made for one of the region’s most diverse surveys, just not quite as birdy as Peter, Carmela and Benjamin Alexander’s September 2009 survey of Ediz Hook with eight birds, six of them hunter-discarded Sooty Grouse, a new species for COASST.
If a log rolls off a beach, does anyone notice? Matt and
Bonnie might, on Ala Spit, where logs like this are
tagged as part of a salmon habitat study.
M. K
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Rod Norvell found this biennium’s only Short-eared Owl on Dungeness Spit Mile 2-3, COASST’s first since October 2006, when Max Smith and Sarah Swanson found one on Oregon Mile 266, and Don and Dalene Edgar found another on South Taurus. Owls aren’t the only birds with talons on Strait beaches; Gary Korb and Carol Volk tagged a Red-tailed Hawk at Tongue Point in January 2011, “44-inch wingspan!!,” and Dave Gittleman added COASST’s first Cooper’s Hawk to the Gittleman/Rost/Kummet team list in December 2009.
north CoastIn an anything-but-quiet 2009 for the North Coast, Surf Scoters rose to the top of almost every September survey, outnumbering White-winged Scoters 3:1. The algae-driven scoter pulse even overwhelmed cumulative COASST data (summed across all regions), lifting Surf Scoters from #12 to #3. That year, as the drama wore down, the North Coast wound up with only one Black Scoter, found by Rod Norvell and guest Shelly Ament on Kalaloch South in November, correctly identified by a distinctive wing attribute, “outer primary is shorter than next two feathers.”
Daniel Ravenel was not among the COASSTers who found themselves in the “thick of things” (literally!) in September. Point Grenville only grossed four birds that month, including a Pink-footed Shearwater and a very
young Common Murre chick. Not unusual, as the beach is super close “as the murre flies” to the Point Grenville colonies: Erin, Erin’s Bride, Grenville Arch. If early season eagle disturbance causes widespread murre egg loss, birds re-lay and chicks fledge as late as October in Washington.
Way smaller than a COMU chick, but correctly identified (to species!), Judy McCuin and Sue Keilman found COASST’s first-ever Orange-crowned Warbler—yup, complete with orange crown in September 2010 on Second Beach. The “Sue duo” also wound up with another tiny and rare find— a Leach’s Storm-Petrel in September 2010 on Third Beach.
south CoastSouth Coast also saw its fair share of Akashiwo bloom finds, with friends, neighbors, WDFW personnel Helmut Zahn and Warren Michaelis, and COASST staff deputized to do additional surveys in October as the bloom took its toll on Common Murres, loons (mostly Pacific and Red-throated) and grebes (Western Grebes, predominantly). All told, South Coast COASSTers documented a whopping 298 Common Murres (compared to 14 in October 2010), 67 grebes and 47 loons. In a struggle against diminishing daylight, inclement weather and dwindling supplies, Nancy Fischer captured the scene well, “Also 14 more NOFU, 2 cormorant beyond Midway Beach Road—at that point I quit measuring, but continued to take photos for each bird found.”
No, not a stingray, but related—Carl Haynie grabs the
“wing” of this Big Skate found in November 2010 on
Griffiths Priday State Park.
T. R
isdon
Wowser! That’s no coffee table! The COASST ruler sits atop a
whale vertebra Janice Havrilak found on her November 2009
survey of Damon Point East.
J. H
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John and Joyce Epler tacked two noteworthy finds to their nine-year COASST record on Ocean Park North: a nearly intact male California Sea Lion in June 2010 and this biennium’s only Northern Shoveler in September 2010.
On the shorebird front, Terry Risdon and Carl and Matt Haynie recorded COASST’s first Short-billed Dowitcher on their “lucky” 13th survey of Griffiths Priday State Park in May 2009. Headed north to breeding locations bordering the Gulf of Alaska, the Pacific subpopulation accounts for about half of the 140,000 birds worldwide. One of this biennium’s two Dunlins showed up on Cranberry North in February 2010 found by Sumer and Latresha Starling, the other spotted by the students of Barbara Blackie’s environmental studies class on Kalaloch South in May. And the star of South Pacific (the beach, not the movie) was our only Sanderling, found among 15 other birds that day by Susan Kloeppel and Jeanne Finke in October 2010.
oreGon oregon northThough “common” is in the name, they’re anything but: this biennium, Bert Johnstone and Peggy Speer found COASST’s first Common Tern on Oregon Mile 196 in October 2010, and seven months later, Dianna Moore ran across another on North Jetty (South Coast, Washington). On the East Coast, it’s a SEANET (COASST’s sister program based in Massachusetts) top find, common enough to be featured in COASST’s A Field Guide to the North Atlantic.
Another vagrant graced the shores of Oregon North’s beaches: a Yellow-billed Loon found by Wendy Williams on Agate Beach in April 2011, a good 350 miles south of its known wintering range. COASST’s only other record of this species is well within the known wintering range—Bishop’s Beach near Homer, Alaska, in February 2007. Due to low population size, low reproductive rate and disturbance on Arctic lake breeding sites, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated the Yellow-billed as a Candidate Species in 2009.
Alaska volunteers could have stopped at Q1 of the Wing Key with this find, but the West Coast version of Beached Birds only makes mention of this rarity on the Red-legged Kittiwake page: “dark upperwing with white mid-wing triangle.” That’s right—a Sabine’s Gull found by Wade Newbegin on Oregon Mile 241 in September 2009.
oregon north
oregon south
humBoldt, CAliforniA
Clam Beach NClam Beach SCrannellEel River NMad River NMad River SMa-le’l MidMa-le’l NMoonstoneMurray RdSouth SpitSouth Spit 2Samoa Bay St NSamoa CookhouseSouth JettyStamps STrinidad St Beach
Big LagoonDry LagoonStone LagoonStone Lagoon N
Battery Point NBattery Point SFalse Klamath CoveGarth BeachNorth Pebble Beach South Beach
Cape Blanco N Hubbard CreekLone Ranch BeachORMI 23
Linda Doerflinger stands next to her once-in-a-lifetime
sighting of a 25-foot Gray Whale on Dry Lagoon. A couple
of weeks later, headlines of the Eureka Times Standard
read, “washed up whale may have been harpooned off
Russia.” Tim Broadman of the National Marine Fisheries
Service found the exposed harpoon matched those from
the Chukotka people who live in Siberia and along the
northern Bering Sea coastline.
oregon southFrom the opposite polar region came one South Polar Skua that Rick Foster correctly identified on his September 2009 survey of Bullards Beach North. COASSTers, a generally meticulous bunch, might well relate to Rick, who prepared a veritable exhibit of evidence, “I took 12 photos but only sent you the best 6 to get a positive ID.” Nearly four years previous, Dianna Moore, Kathleen Wolgemuth and Barbara Patton claimed COASST’s first SPSK in July 2005; that find was documented on Northwest Cable News TV!
Jan Henault didn’t find a single bird on her first survey of Lone Ranch Beach in June 2010, but the sands revealed something speckled and white—a Common Murre eggshell, which didn’t come far: likely from Twin Rocks, home to about 11,000 Common Murres just north of Brookings, Oregon.
Doug and Mariann Croucher spent their first surveys of Oregon Mile 101—July and August 2010—counting some tiny chicks of Oregon coastal breeders: three Common Murres, six Western Gulls and one Pelagic Cormorant. A consistent signal, coastal breeders (and their chicks) account for more than 90% of species found after the breeding season as exhausted parents and fragile young succumb to starvation and early fall storms.
A migrant Whimbrel rounded out the selection found on the Oregon South coast thanks to David Sweetman and Karen Olsen on Seven Devils Wayside in May 2011.
CaliForniaHumboldtFor those of you that think gull identification is “for the birds,” figuratively and literally, time to put Gary and Lauren Lester on speed dial. On Murray Road in January 2010, they correctly separated a lone Thayer’s Gull from its more common Glaucous-winged and Western Gull cousins by its bi-colored primaries and an all-white underwing including primary tips. Rich Ridenhour and Linda Doerflinger found another COASST first, a Wood Duck, at Dry Lagoon in October 2010. Without finding a bill or feet, Rich and Linda pulled out two characters, “green speculum sheen and speckled underwing pattern,” which are diagnostic for this duck, and correctly identified it to species.
Post the Common Murre pulse (32 chicks in June of 2009), Pam and Dennis Cahill were at it again in July, with a few refinds (predictable…) and a juvenile California Sea Lion. And they’re not alone: Summer 2009 brought 21 additional marine mammal records, with Kay Zeleny and Marie Granshaw reporting, “the marine mammal stranding network responded to another 20-plus animals.”
The first since 2005, the white underwing flashes of this
South Polar Skua caught Rick Foster’s attention on
Bullards Beach North in September 2009.
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entangled birds
Mortality Related to Human ActivitiesOiled & Entangled Birds
1 Hook, 2 Line, 3 Rope, 4 Twine
As usual, entangled birds were a small percentage of total finds, accounting for only 0.29% of the birds in COASST year 2009–2010 and 0.37% in 2010–2011. Three new species were added to the entanglement list—Black-legged Kittiwake, Heermann’s Gull and Pigeon Guillemot. Only 0.09% of total finds in 2009–2010 and 0.08% in 2010–2011 were oiled, including the first two Common Loons.
Total finds include all first-found birds. Refinds not included in totals. Note that major species—accounting for greater than 5% in any COASST year—are in bold. Only species found in Years 11 and 12 are listed. Cumulative totals for each species are listed in the right-hand darker-shaded columns. Reported totals shown here may vary slightly from those in past annual reports due to processing of survey data submitted after publication.
SPECIES OF CONCERN 1 Federally Endangered, 2 Federally Threatened, 3 Federal Species of Concern, 4 Federal Candidate, 5 WA State Endangered, 6 OR State Endangered, 7 CA State Endangered, 8 AK State Endangered, 9 WA State Threatened, 10 OR State Threatened, 11 WA State Sensitive, 12 WA State Candidate, 13 WA State Monitored, R 2007 Audubon Watch List Red, Y 2007 Audubon Watch List Yellow
YR YR YR YR YR YR YR YR YR TOTAL TOTAL SPECIES 12 # 11# 12 % 11 % 10 % 9 % 8 % 7 % 6 % # %
Most time spent traveling: 223 hours (Sue Nattinger; Shi Shi Beach, Shipwreck Point and Twin River)
Most km walked: 342 (Vic Nelson; Point No Point)
COASST at a Glance 2009–2011Answers to the Quiz
A.Three webbed toes with 4
th lobed leads to Waterfowl:
Diving Ducks. White in the wing and a thick bill with pale feathers along the forehead—using the waterfowl family page, you’ve narrowed choices down to scoter or eider. Good work! None of the eiders have an all-white speculum, so this is a White-winged Scoter. With dark feet and a dark bill tip—a female.
B. “Seagull” is a good guess, but only half the answer. Indeed, this bird has the characteristic gray mantle with black wingtips, white “windows” and “fingernails” of adult gulls. Smaller than a Ring-billed or California, this gull has a white “knuckle” band separating the mantle from the wingtips—that’s right—a Mew Gull.
C. Another gray mantle with black wingtips, like Photo B, but the wingchord is smaller still. For Lower 48 COASSTers, that leaves you with Red-legged or Black-legged Kittiwake. Notice the broken, dark diagonal stripe from wrist to elbow? In the Beached Birds: Alaska wing key, only one common bird has that feature, an immature Black-legged Kittiwake.
D. Three toes, all webbed, and a 17-cm wing chord makes this bird a large Alcid. Did you catch the pale bill and pale stripe on the leading edge of the wings? Tell-tale “true puffin” signatures. This bird lacks the deep bill of a Tufted or Horned Puffin. In fact, without the “rhino” horn and plumes, it’s a juvenile Rhinoceros Auklet.
E.California, Oregon and Washington COASSTers watch out—would we really have given you something that easy? White-tipped secondaries = murre, true. But this bird sports a white moustache. And did you check those measurements? The bill is way short. It’s a resident breeder in Alaska, the Thick-billed Murre.
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“But… what about Canada?” Like Southeast Alaska, much of British Columbia’s 27,000 kilometers of coastline is rugged and remote. Although you won’t see the Canadian coastline on a COASST map, it is surveyed by volunteers in our sister program, the British Columbia Beached Bird Survey (BCBBS).
The BC effort, originally spearheaded by Dr. Alan Burger at the University of Victoria in 1986, was re-initiated in 2002 by Bird Studies Canada, the BirdLife International co-partner in Canada (www.birdscanada.org). Under the direction of Peter Davidson and Karen Barry, the program coordinates the effort of over 70 volunteers at more than 100 sites (see map), and it continues to expand each year.
Initiated to provide baseline data after the Nestucca oil spill, BCBBS has documented a local decline in oiling from about 50% to just 1% (in line with COASST’s findings) along the west coast of Vancouver Island since the 1980s and 1990s, coincident with increased enforcement efforts.
What washes in just north of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Strait of Georgia? The most commonly found species on BC’s beaches are the same as COASST: Northern Fulmar, Common Murre and Glaucous-winged Gull. And the oddballs? Ruddy Duck, American Kestrel, and Ring-necked Pheasant(!) to name a few.
In an effort to study Salish Sea-wide patterns, COASST and BCBBS collaborated on a study examining fisheries-associated mortality events (or wrecks), published in the journal Marine Ornithology in 2009. The take-home message is that wreck events, occasionally severe but also infrequent, pale in comparison to baseline mortality across the thousands of kilometers of Salish Sea beaches.
“COASST has been an inspiration to us in British Columbia in many ways, from the great materials that you have produced (which all our BC volunteers also use!) to the much broader value of having COASST as a flagship for a growing movement of well-respected citizen science,” remark Karen and Pete. “Conservation planners, managers and research groups increasingly recognize the citizen-scientist partnership as a valuable way of doing business
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Project Profilebritish Columbia beached bird survey: Filling a big Gap
cost-effectively, while building public constituencies for conservation.” COASST staff, too, look forward to a continued cross-border collaboration.
Karen Barry and Peter Davidson stand ready to catch
the next Sandhill Crane sighting outside their office.
“We keep an office window bird list and I think it’s
over 65 species now!” says Karen.
Stretching from Langara Island (N) to the southern tip of
Vancouver Island, BCBBS even monitors the rugged coast-
line of Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte
Islands.
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residents and migrantsIt’s a simple story, and one repeated year after year on COASST beaches. The local breeders, exhausted and thin after a summer of foraging for the family, lost in an early fall storm. The long-distance migrants flocking in from an open ocean transit, unable to survive the ravages of winter. Over the entire COASST program, from California to Alaska, from 1999 to 2011, more than half of the beached birds fall into these two categories: post-breeding mortality and winterkill.
Our perennial #1—Common Murres—have this position because they are the quintessential resident breeder along much of the outer coast of the COASST Lower 48. From northern California up to the tip of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, murres breed by the tens of thousands on islands and sea stacks in the nearshore. Sometimes a stone’s throw from the mainland, this seabird is truly “common.” Come late summer and early fall, emaciated murres—both adults and young-of-the-year—will wash in to the broad sandy beaches of the outer coast.
Migrants, as it turns out, come in a variety of flavors. Some are long-distance migrants, like the shearwaters traveling by the millions from the southern hemisphere to “winter” (our summer) in Alaska. Suddenly stuck in a super-dense concentration of fellow migrants who have collectively stripped the local environment of food, shearwaters “wreck” with regularity.
A whole host of species breed inland—on bogs, lakes and other freshwater bodies—migrating to the coast after sending out the season’s new fledglings. From Alaska and the Northern Territories (Canada), large-bodied birds like scoters and tiny shorebirds like phalaropes all come down to the West Coast to winter. Closer to home, Western Grebes and their close relation, Clark’s Grebes; a host of loon species from Common to Red-throated; and even a smattering of gulls like Ring-bills and Californias, transit from breeding locations in eastern Washington down through California, west to the coast, looking for foraging opportunities and a safe haven to molt their ragged flight feathers in preparation for winter.
As the COASST range has expanded both north and south, we’ve definitely picked up more species, and
What’s Washed In?we’ve also blurred the line between resident and migrant. Breeding in Alaska and blasting down to the warmer climes of California to fatten up during the winter, Northern Fulmars pile up on Pacific Northwest beaches from Washington to California during their southward migra-tion and occasionally on the way back as well. Rhinoceros Auklets? Well, they do breed along the West Coast of the Lower 48, but their population center is actually in British Columbia. Most of the rhinos we see are migrants from Canada. Ditto for Cassin’s Auklets.
Trying to figure out what’s normal and what’s amiss can be a puzzle. Are we seeing post-breeding mortality of locals, or a wave of migrants that have exhausted themselves in transit? If fulmars wash up in northern Oregon in November by the thousands, is that “normal”? Right time of year, but so many birds... Is there a smoking gun? With two years of beaching patterns to report, we’ve saved up a lot of stories.
What’s in a Graph? We graph COASST data to highlight seasonal and regional differences. Notice that the “COASST year” starts in June and ends in May. We do this to get a better sense of the breeding and post-breeding seasons, the effects of winter and the pre-breeding migration in early spring. The vertical axis is “encounter rate” or the number of beached birds COASSTers are apt to find in a particular region and month if they surveyed one kilometer of coastline (carcasses per kilometer). Of course we all know every beach is different, so these are the region-wide averages.
As you compare graphs from adjacent regions, one thing to keep in mind is the scale on the encounter rate axis. Some regions just get more birds. Vertical axes change from a maximum of 0.6 carcasses per kilometer for Puget Sound or Southeast Alaska, to highs of 20 or even 30 carcasses per kilometer along the outer coast of the Lower 48 and in the Aleutian Islands, respectively.
Columns and lines—what’s the difference? Following the line across the months on the graphs shows you the long-term average—calculated over all of the years COASST has surveyed beaches in a given region (also listed on each graph). The vertical columns are the particular encounter rates calculated for the 2009–2010 season (dark green) and the 2010–2011 season (light green). When
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vertical columns rise well above the long-term line, we pay attention. That means there might be something unusual going on: an earlier or later peak in post-breeding or winterkill, a wreck (defined as a concentrated beaching of just one or two species), or just a super-abundance of the “right” species at the “right” time of year. When vertical columns fall well below the long-term line, we wonder, but don’t usually worry. Occasionally absence can signal a problem, as in 2005 when no murres beached during the usual post-breeding peak. In that case, the peak came earlier in spring, provoked by lack of upwelling, low production and not enough forage fish to feed the murres. When the long-term average falls pretty much at the same level as the vertical columns, we smile and nod. Just another “normal” year.
You can get a sense of the variability among beaches within a region by examining the “error bars” (the T-shape sitting on top each vertical column). A larger (taller) error bar means more variability, often exacerbated by a smaller sample size (the number of beaches surveyed every month). Tiny, little, hard-to-see error bars mean that most of the
beaches within the region are pretty much getting the same number of birds washing in within a given month, making variability low. We’ve only put in the “positive” error bars (sitting above the columns on the graph). To estimate whether a given year (2009-2010, or 2010-2011) is different from normal, mentally mirror the error bar and see whether the long-term average line falls within that plus-or-minus range.
Because some beaches are quite short, we take care to make sure our calculations aren’t biased by removing the data points from our regional results when we think the spike is multiplication not real mortality. Think about the number of carcasses per kilometer if 3 birds washed up on a 250-meter pocket beach—12!—probably not realistic. Of course, this is a bit tricky in places like the Aleutians, where many of the beaches are small and our sample size is low. The “small beach effect” is highlighted as a white portion on top of some columns (like August 2009—Oregon North) so you can easily pick out the difference between lots of carcasses, and multiplication. This year we’ve added a new graph feature—a shaded set of months encompassing
This is a “birdy” region— up to 20 birds per kilometer.
Shaded area = breeding season of Common Murres
Black line = long-term average
Small beach effects
Number of years contributing to long-term average
dark green columns = 2009–2010; light green columns = 2010–2011
jun jul aug sep oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may
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the breeding season of one of our most ubiquitous residents —Common Murres. Taken from data in Birds of North America, the shading is mean lay date plus 60 days. It’s inexact, but does clearly show the association between breeding and the post-breeding mortality spike.
alaskaOur northernmost COASST sites in the Chukchi Sea are cold, cold, cold! Suffice to say nothing much washes in for half of the year—the ocean is frozen over. Come spring in April and May, breakup opens the ocean up to the sunlight, phytoplankton blooms, and the brief cycle of summer in the Arctic begins. Breeding is quick up here. A female Thick-billed Murre at Cape Lisburne in the Chukchi Sea might lay in late June, and the chick will leave the colony with the male by August. With just two years under our belts, we’re starting to sense a pattern, with a peak in bird encounters—mostly Glaucous Gulls and Black-legged Kittiwakes—at the solstice in June/July. In fact, the Chukchi addition is responsible for the distinct uptick in Glaucous Gull encounters in 2009–2010.
Sites to the south(!) in the Bering Sea peak a little later, in July/August. The 2009–2010 year was an uptick of both breeders (mostly Northern Fulmars) and migrants (mostly Short-tailed Shearwaters) in July. In 2010–2011, those same species washed in along the Bering Sea beaches in much lower numbers, leading to a smaller-than-usual signal.
Take out the shearwaters and here’s what’s cool about this northern Alaska signal: it’s during the breeding season, not after. The shortened northern season also seems to have only one peak (not two like the Lower 48), composed of both residents and migrants. We are still cautious about our interpretation, as our data collection season is shorter due to the extended ravages of winter, we don’t have that many years under our belts, and our Alaska sample size is small, especially when compared to the tremendous amount of coastline in this state. We’ve highlighted the Common Murre breeding season in each region with a shaded region, so you can see when the beaching peaks occur. Compare Alaska to the Lower 48. Although Alaska affords a pristine breeding habitat for millions of birds—little disturbance and lots of food—it’s still a harsh environment, even in the summer.
In the Aleutians, still farther south and west, deposition was—as usual—much higher, especially in 2009–2010. Why? Many of the COASST beaches in the Aleutians are
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algae bloom wreck—scoters
2009 lots of murres
long-term average without scoters (dotted line)
no birds 2010
manned (and womanned) by Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge biologists spending the summer on seabird colonies from Kruzof Island to Buldir Island, taking the pulse of the seabirds and the marine environment. And yes, just what you would expect—more birds wash in on beaches fronting the cliffs of a 100,000-strong seabird colony. Glaucous-winged Gulls, Black-legged Kittiwakes and Thick-billed and Common Murres typify the Aleutians COASST signal. In fact, in 2009–2010, additional surveys on Buldir transects D and E grossed more than 60 additional birds, showing up later in the season, during July and August (after the usual June peak). All but one of the 25 Parakeet Auklets found in 2010–2011 came from Buldir (the other from Polovina Beach on St Paul Island, Bering Sea).
Gulf of Alaska? —rock steady. Like always, the peak in August–September was full of post-breeding resident birds: Black-legged Kittiwakes and Glaucous-winged and Herring
2010–2011 lots of fulmars
2010–2011 lots of fulmars
algae bloom wreck—murres, grebes, loons
2010 missing murres
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Gulls that make their home on the Kenai Peninsula, some with breeding colonies right next to beaches. Early fall continued on to a calm winter, at least beached bird-wise, and a bit of a rise in May during the initiation of the local breeding season. And Southeast—these COASSTers are troopers. It’s cold and it’s often wet and dark, and there are no beached birds. Notice that the Y-axis scale is miniscule— 5 times less than the Chukchi and Bering scales, and 40 times less than the Aleutians. These quiet inside waters and narrow, glacial beaches don’t make for the drama—and trauma—of the outer coast.
Pacific northwest outer CoastStare at these graphs (page 19) and a few things leap out at you. The tremendous spike in September and October 2009 in the North Coast of Washington. The November 2010 peak in the South Coast of Washington, with echoes of same down through Oregon. The quiescent post-breeding season of 2010 in northern California. The lack of a spring migration pulse in March and April. With few exceptions—it’s the usual players.
And here’s one of the exceptions: 2009 saw an untoward number of Surf Scoters, and secondarily White-winged Scoters, washing into Washington outer coast beaches. Reported in COASST Reports 2008–2009, this huge wreck was the result of a “perfect storm” of events. Post-breeding scoters, down from lakes in Alaska and Canada’s northern territories, holed up as usual in the small embayments of the Washington coastline to fatten up on mussels, clams and other abundant shellfish. A seasonal molt of their flight feathers literally turned them into sitting ducks, unable to flee deteriorating conditions. At the same time, an unusually warm September fueled a huge (over 77 kilometers from north to south!) bloom of fall phyto-plankton (the single-celled dinoflagellate, Akashiwo sanguinea), which vacuumed clean the local surface waters of the nutrients needed for cell growth. Early fall storms pushed the starving cells to shore, breaking them like eggs in the pounding surf and whipping up the cell contents into a greasy grey-green meringue that coated the feathers of every marine bird unable to get out of Dodge. Acting like soap, the Akashiwo foam caused normally buoyant and water-tight feathers to flatten, exposing bird skin to the frigid ocean water. Without insulation, the birds quickly succumbed to the cold. A similar, but smaller, event in October along the southern Washington coast
trapped and killed hundreds of molting murres and also grebes and loons. The earlier August peak along the outer coast of Washington and Oregon was also murres, but not caused by the Akashiwo bloom.
After that, the rest of the 2009–2011 biennium seems like a cakewalk. Our two consistent “winners”—murres and fulmars—were again in evidence, albeit in opposition to each other. In the fall of 2009—just before the Akashiwo bloom hit the Washington beaches, a stronger than normal pulse of post-breeding murres hit the beaches in August and September from California up through Washington, averaging up to five murres per kilometer along Oregon and California beaches. (High, but still doesn’t compare to the murre post-breeding wrecks of 2004—a whopping 15 murres per kilometer graced Oregon north beaches in August!). A year later, the post-breeding season of 2010 was quiescent, and those missing murres pushed the annual signal way below the long-term average.
Calm for murres, but boisterous for fulmars: later in the fall of 2010, outer coast beaches of the Pacific Northwest picked up the migrating fulmar signal, primarily in the middle of our range—the South Coast of Washington and the entire coastline of Oregon. November saw region-wide averages of 6–7 fulmars per kilometer, second only to a fulmar peak of 9–11 birds per kilometer when a sustained wreck had COASSTers knee-deep in fulmars from October 2003 through January of 2004. Both north (North Coast of Washington) and south (Humboldt) of this area, fall 2010 fulmar numbers were normal.
One of our most abundant species, fulmars are also one of the most erratic—in some years, the post-breeding migration or “winterkill” signal is very strong, as in 2003–2004, but in many years it is almost 10 times lower. In general, about one in every three-to-four years we see a fall fulmar wreck. Occasionally, as in 2008, we’ll see another fulmar peak in the spring (March–April) when these “snowbirds” are returning north to begin breeding, but this peak is lower (approximately three fulmars per kilometer) than in the fall, and much more occasional.
A few other contributors to the fall-winter pattern included Rhinoceros Auklets and Brown Pelicans. Rhinos usually wash in during their spring migration northward, along with British Columbia colony neighbors, Cassin’s Auklets. This spring “peak” has been absent for the past several years, but it’s still apparent in the long-term average. In 2010, rhinos echoed the fulmar signal, adding another
bird or so (0.6–1.4 birds per kilometer) to fall-winter finds from the South Coast of Washington down through Oregon. Although this is a small contribution to the total bird peaks of November–December (6–12 birds per kilometer), it is the highest annual fall peak we’ve seen in rhinos to date.
Brown Pelicans wrecked in Oregon North in November–December of 2009, averaging upwards of a bird per kilometer. Unlike fulmar wrecks that can smear down hundreds of kilometers of coastline, pelicans appear to wash in to extremely limited areas, in extremely high numbers: Oregon Mile 286 had 24 pelicans in a single December survey! This phenomena may be the new normal for pelicans, as December 2008–January 2009 saw a similar wreck pattern, again in northern Oregon. Effect of the Columbia River? Brown Pelican numbers are up all along the coast, with roosting sites at the mouth of the Columbia especially strong.
One final note—White-winged Scoters, having recovered from the devastating Akashiwo wreck of fall 2009, washed in to our northern California beaches during the spring. March–May in Humboldt saw 2–10 times more White-wings than usual, or a maximum of one bird every 2 kilometers. Although this is 5–10 times lower than the Akashiwo scoter peak of September 2009 (check out the North Coast, Washington graph), in aggregate, this spring bump-up accounted for more than 45 finds.
inside Waters of WashingtonTo give a sense of scale and timing, the North Coast of Washington graph is just to the left of the inside waters regions, stretching from the Strait of Juan de Fuca inside to Puget Sound. Beached bird abundance—no comparison. Outer coast beaches get the birds. But examine the timing: the early fall peak along the outer coast is echoed in the Strait, as birds diffuse into the Sound (murres are an excellent example). Our most recent years along the Puget Sound beaches appear to display the same pattern—higher in August and September. However, in general, the farther from the coast, the less distinct the seasonal pattern. With few exceptions, one month grades into another, indistinguishable except for perhaps the subtle change of species.
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August and September, like other months, have a mix of seabirds and land birds. Land birds aside, beaches that pick up hints of the post-breeding outer coast signal include sandy swaths that stick out to “catch” birds (all five Dungeness Spit miles, Ediz Hook) and those with good fetch (distance over open water for wind to produce waves): west-facing in the Strait of Juan de Fuca–Fort Casey and west-facing into the Strait of Georgia–Sucia Drive beaches.
2010–2011 Common Tern House Sparrow Mourning Dove Orange-crowned Warbler Semipalmated Plover Thayer’s Gull Wedge-tailed Shearwater Wood Duck
# of U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service banded birds found: 7
2009–2010Brandt’s Cormorant—South Beach, Bastendorff Black-footed Albatross—South Taurus, Copalis Rocks Western Gull—Bullards SouthSurf Scoter—Third Beach Mallard—Governor Patterson State Park Brown Pelican—Point Grenville, Agate Beach
2010–2011California Gull—Clam Beach South
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True to its name, the male comes dressed like a party trickster: brilliant chestnut crown and flanks, white patches on cheek, ear and upperwing, stripes on neck, breast and shoulders with an otherwise bluish plumage. The female? Well, she’s no vaudeville act—a rather plain brown duck, sharing only the white cheek and ear patch, and the small blue-gray bill.
With many of the same wintering locations in common with other diving ducks, such as scoters and goldeneyes, Harlequins depart from the standard lake-breeding strategy in favor of two distinct areas: fast-moving inland streams or coastal estuaries. Here, the female carefully canvasses the area to select some prime real estate, often with preference for midstream islands, nice shrub cover and a good view. The “nest” is actually a surface scrape on a bed of needles, mosses, leaves or stones, lined with down for some extra insulation. Sometime during the month-long incubation period, the male high-tails it to the coast while the female holds down the fort, keeping six eggs at a cozy 98˚F. Make no mistake, she’s not left trying to feed six mouths—they’re feeding themselves a mere day or two after hatching. In another month and a half, the young will head for the coast.
In the winter months, Harlequin Ducks forage close to shore, gleaning a diet of crunchy marine invertebrates —crabs, amphipods (tiny, shrimp-like organisms), snails, clams and limpets—from the sea floor. Much more ubiquitous during this time, more than 5,000 Harlequins were counted during the 2011 annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count in North America. At the top of the national list: Alaska COASST locations Kodiak—420, Sitka—63;
Washington locations: Sequim—218, Port Angeles—98. With the removal of the Elwha Dams (see partner profile page 38), biologists and birders are hopeful the 50 miles of restored, uninterrupted river may increase the local Harle-quin Duck population in the greater Port Angeles area still further.
COASST finds of beached Harlequins aren’t so numerous, thankfully. In 11 years of COASST data, only two birds have ever wound up on a survey: a female on Buldir Transect B (Alaska) in June of 2008 and a male on Hobuck Beach (Washington) in November, 2009. Still, large beachings have occurred. Two winter/spring oil spills in Alaska have taken their toll: Exxon Valdez in March 1989—1,300 Harlequins, and Selendang Ayu in December 2004—another 60 birds. Other threats, including illegal hunting, entanglement in nets, disturbance at nesting sites and habitat degradation are also of concern.
With a bi-coastal population of less than 220,000, Harlequins were listed in Canada as Endangered in 1990 and in the United States as a Candidate Species in 1991. These designations launched a renewed research and monitoring effort—on the West Coast in particular, a joint effort between Glacier National Park (Montana) and the Montana Natural Heritage Program has worked to iden-tify critical nesting habitat and track sightings of banded birds—10% found again—most frequently in British Columbia, Canada. COASSTers, too, continue to monitor beaches adjacent to prime Harlequin Duck wintering habitat, especially in greater Puget Sound (Washington), Alsea, Newport and Siletz Bays (Oregon), and the sheltered waters of Prince William Sound (Alaska).
B. Whitney
Species Profile: Harlequin Duck
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COASST PeoplevolunteersThe past two years have seen an incredible amount of time spent and kilometers walked by COASSTers. In total, they spent 15,779 hours surveying and 10,457 hours traveling, and walked 14,575 kilometers in the 2009–2010 and 2010–2011 COASST years. That’s 797 volunteers who conducted 6,504 surveys on 419 beaches over the past two years!
staffOn the North Coast of Washington and the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Janet continues to oversee COASST operations while simultaneously coordinating volunteers for the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary’s Discovery Center. Always happy to share the beauty of Hobuck Beach with others, in May, Janet cheerfully hosted a group of five COASST interns, three new volunteer recruits, and long-time COASST volunteers Sally Parker and Miriam Bobkoff. Special recognition is owed to Rose Forbes. In addition to conducting monthly COASST surveys at Gray’s Marsh, Rose also assists Janet with many hours of data entry.
Jane Dolliver, our Program Coordinator and font-of-all-
COASST-knowledge, had a whirlwind biennium: training new employees, conducting 26 COASSTer trainings and socials, giving 5 presentations, and heading up our North Pacific Groundfish Observer Program trainings (turns out a bycatch bird doesn’t look too different from a beachcast one). Oh! and Jane also does bird ID verification, runs all of our budgets, helps Julia with grants, and still finds time to bake the best brownies in Seattle.
The COASST office has gained the expertise of Charlie Wright, data verifier extraordinaire. A life-long birder, Charlie began leading trips for the Rainier Audubon Society at age 11. On any given day, you’ll find him with Beached Birds and Sibley’s in hand, inches from his computer screen, scrutinizing the details of a tattered gull, all in order to put his enthusiastic stamp of approval on a WEGU identification. Sound tedious? Not to Charlie— “I pretty much get to geek out over birds all day. It’s the ideal thing I’d want to do on any given day.”
The autumn of 2010 saw the arrival of another new staffer, Annie Woods, coordinator of COASST volunteers and interns. Annie came to COASST from the Adirondack Ecological Center where she worked as a senior research support specialist, studying all manner of forest-dwelling
After her first training in Newport, Oregon, Volunteer
Coordinator Annie Woods (left) and Jane check out
the murre colony at Yaquina Head lighthouse.
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Auklets aplenty—Data Verifier Charlie Wright shows
off specimens from the ornithology collection at the Burke
Museum of Natural History and Culture.
J. D
olliv
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critters from land snails to small mammals, and birds of course! After a year of service through AmeriCorps, Annie is impressed with the incredible army of volunteers that give their time and energy (and smile through pelting rain) to make the COASST program possible.
After dozens of hours spent on the beach during the scoter wreck of 2009, Penelope Chilton decided she needed more extreme fieldwork and headed south, far south, to Antarctica’s King George Island. There she is collecting data on penguins, skuas and petrels. According to Penelope, “the island is brimming with wildlife and every day is a new adventure.”
Executive Director Julia Parrish is sporting a new title these days. In April 2011, Julia was named as the first-ever Associate Dean of Academic Affairs and Diversity for the College of the Environment at the University of Washington. No worries, though—aside from her new role, Julia will still be visiting COASST communities for talks, trainings and workshops.
internsOur intern program has continued to grow during the last two years, hosting 31 University of Washington students who contributed 4,352 hours of service—that’s about
Over the past 3½ years, I have become pretty proficient in
identifying dead birds, which is definitely a skill that not
many people have! I have also learned about non-profit
organizations and what is needed to organize a large team
of volunteers. Through COASST, I have made some great
friends—thanks for a great undergraduate experience!
—Erin Tomaras, Senior Intern
Congratulations to 2011 University of Washington
graduate and COASST senior intern, Kelsey Gordon,
who received a Mary Gates Leadership Scholarship
for her work developing citizen science and COASST
lessons for high school students.
A. W
oods
I have really enjoyed getting to know the volunteers and
their beaches, seeing all the cool pictures of birds and
other things that wash up on beaches. I can’t believe I’m
graduating and won’t be in the office checking out surveys
or sending emails anymore! I can only imagine how much
more COASST and all its volunteers will continue to do...
and I’m looking forward to hearing about it.
—Stephanie Doyle, Intern
equivalent to 40 hours a week or one full-time employee for two years!
What do interns do? Start with COASST finds this biennium—9,667. For each, at least one photo was printed, sorted, labeled and filed. Before COASST staff headed out to a training, students assembled kits, field guides, protocols and beach maps. And then there’s COASST email, Facebook and Twitter accounts. And, they weren’t just stuck in the office—each quarter, students got the chance to adopt a nearby COASST beach, go on a field trip to the outer coast and help out with COASST trainings and socials (did someone say free food?).
In 2010, we started our senior intern program, with Kelsey Gordon and Erin Tomaras stepping in as our first senior interns. Senior interns take a leading role in laying out the endless to-do list and in delegating tasks. Whether it’s doing a wrap up from the weekend’s volunteer training or helping to advertise for the next, senior interns have a plan to get it all done.
Additionally, Jenny East, a graduate of Western Wash-ington University, offered her expertise and organizational skills to pull together material to lay the foundation for a COASST marine mammal guide.
Interns speak...
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June 11, 2009 Poulsbo Marine Science Center, Poulsbo, Washington
august 19, 2009 Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge Summer Lecture Series, Olympia, Washington
october 1, 2009 Laskeek Bay Conservation Society 20th Anniversary Symposium and Celebration of Citizen Science, Haida Cultural Center, Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia
February 25, 2010 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting, Portland, Oregon
march 19, 2010 Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council, Port Angeles, Washington
may 14, 2010 Ecotrust Building, Portland, Oregon
July 9, 2010 Makah Museum, Neah Bay, Washington
october 13, 2010 Keynote to the University Professionals Continuing Education Association Region West Conference, Seattle, Washington
october 16, 2010 Marine and Science Technology Center, Des Moines, Washington
october 23, 2010 Olympic National Park Visitors’ Center, Port Angeles, Washington
october 27, 2010 South Sound Science Symposium, Shelton, Washington
november 18, 2010 Alaska Bird Conference, Anchorage, Alaska
January 20, 2011 RE Sources Sustainable Living Center, Bellingham, Washington
april 11, 2011 Kodiak Area Marine Science Symposium, Kodiak, Alaska
april 22, 2011 Spring Seminar Series, Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, Charleston, Oregon
may 5, 2011 Kitsap Beach Naturalist Program, Bremerton, Washington
may 13, 2011 Second International Marine Conservation Congress, Victoria, British Columbia
may 24, 2011 People for Puget Sound’s Science Café, Everett, Washington
COASST Talks
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We recognize the following students who have helped in the office over the past two years:
BiologyOmar Abdelbadie Jasmine PalmerStephanie Doyle Steve Pirotte *Stefanie Gleason ** Stefanie Porter *Ann Hansen * Erica Sherman **Natasha Lozanoff Kate Terpstra **Lindsey Nelson
Program on the EnvironmentJessica Jetter ** Alexandra UlmkeRachel Mickey Samantha ZwickerErin Tomaras
Environmental Science and Resource ManagementKaitlyn Schwindt Monica WhiteJackie Walls
White wing linings, for sure. Diane Winterboer profiles
a Pacific Loon wing from the teaching collection at the
COASST training in Newport, Oregon, May 2011.
J. D
olliv
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Sure, it’s COASST’s southernmost beach, but this isn’t So-Cal! Hat
and coat required at Joe’s beach, Eel River North.
Volunteer Spotlight Joe Ceriani region: Humboldt; beach: eel river north
Joe Ceriani’s first visit to the Humboldt Bay area was more than 20 years ago on a Sacramento Audubon Society field trip. Although he dreamed of living near the ocean, his work at McClellan Air Force Base kept him near Sacramento. “I never thought I could afford to live on the beach in California!” At retirement, Joe remembered Humboldt Bay and realized his dream might be possible if he moved north. Six years ago, Joe packed up and settled in Eureka.
An avid birdwatcher, Joe soon joined the local Audubon chapter—the Redwood Region Audubon Society. At one of the meetings, he heard Pete Nelson, then a Marine Advisor for California Sea Grant, speak about COASST. Intrigued, Joe attended a COASST training and signed up to survey COASST’s southernmost beach, Eel River North. Even though it’s a bit of a drive from his home, COASST surveys give Joe a reason to visit this beautiful (and popular!) spot monthly. “My beach has a fantastic view of Humboldt Bay, and great fishing and birdwatching opportunities.” Birds aren’t the only thing grazing the skies at Eel River North—this beach is adjacent to a popular hang-gliding spot, Table Bluff, sporting a 165-foot cliff for take-offs.
After more than four years of surveying, Joe has a perfect attendance record at Eel River North (never missed a month!) and has roped in help from birdwatching
friends Kathy Layton, Linda Doerflinger and Rich Ridenhour. Linda and Rich liked it so much, they began surveying their own COASST beach—Dry Lagoon. By far, Common Murres are the most common beached bird finds at Eel River North, but Joe has taken particular interest in the Western Grebes that he sees feeding in the breakers, and has found beached a few times. “When you can examine seabirds up close and look at the structure of the legs, you can really see why they have difficulty walking and struggle to escape the beach.” As Joe puts it, even an avid birdwatcher has much to learn from COASST surveys because “a bird in the hand is better than a bird in your binoculars!”
merrill Jensen region: alaska southeast; beach: shrine of st therese, boy scout beach, eagle beach
Alaska’s Southeast COASST region, like Puget Sound and the San Juan Islands, has notoriously low beached bird deposition. That, however, doesn’t stop Merrill Jensen from hitting not just one, but three beaches in search of his first official COASST find (he had a Monty Python-esque run-in with a “not quite dead” Dunlin on Boy Scout Beach, but that’s another story). Although these three sites aren’t very far apart, they couldn’t be more different: “Shrine of St Therese is quite short and in a protected harbor, Boy Scout Beach is one of the best stretches of
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Merrill has lots on his list! Making it to the Arctic
Circle–check! Monthly surveys of three beaches?
Triple check!
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Sally and Paul pause for a moment on Hobuck Beach, with
Wa-atch Beach and Cape Flattery in the distance—just ask
Sally, who says, “it’s a special place.”
sandy beach in Southeast Alaska and I usually have the place to myself, and Eagle Beach is a remarkable tidal flat.” Merrill has witnessed nature in action at Eagle Beach, known as a year-round feeding ground for birds and bears alike. While on a COASST survey there, he noted, “Dead and dying salmon everywhere…gulls, eagles and ravens feasting on the bounty. Being a first-hand observer of the great cycle of life…priceless!” Fellow members of the Juneau Audubon Society are always interested to hear what Merrill finds, and he has plenty to share. “All these locations have lots of bird activity going on; you never know what bird might show up.”
Interestingly enough, Merrill has had better luck (if you can call it that) finding dead birds outside of COASST. During a trip to Cape Cod for his son’s wedding, Merrill wrote to us after finding five different species within a 1-km stretch of beach, “At long last, I’ve discovered beached birds…unfortunately, they weren’t found on any of my reporting beaches. They weren’t even on the left side of the continent.” Back in Juneau, Merrill watches as the seasons change. “Ice wrack—you all probably don’t get to see that very often,” Merrill writes. He’s also witness to the first signs of spring, as the “last frontier” explodes with life. “Spring is on us like a herd of thundering buffalo! Birds are on the move north, and I see something new every day, which is always cool. Yesterday, the first harrier sailed through,” adds Merrill.
Aside from his interest in all things birds—he’s a board member of the Juneau Audubon Society—Merrill is a horticulturalist and arboretum manager for the City of Juneau. A member of numerous garden and horticultural organizations, Merrill also finds time for the Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges, and the Alaska Photographic Arts Association. Even with all
these activities to keep him busy, Merrill finds time to contribute to citizen science through COASST. With the opportunity to visit three amazing beaches chock full of wildlife monthly, as Merrill would say, “Why not?” sally and Paul Parker region: north Coast beaches: Wa-atch, sooes south, Hobuck beach
Of the myriad ways people find out about COASST, we’ve found another one to add to the list—pink backpacks. As residents of Neah Bay at the northwest tip of the Olympic Peninsula, Sally and Paul Parker have always enjoyed walking along Hobuck and Sooes beaches. One day on Sooes, they spied a couple zig-zagging along the beach, sporting a pink backpack. Part of a class? A cult? Or just a crazy couple? Sally and Paul investigated. It was Ingrid and Eftin Strong conducting their COASST survey. The Parkers were interested.
Paul grew up in Neah Bay and knew his seabirds well; Sally had lived in Neah Bay since the 1960s and had learned a lot about local birds, especially raptors, through a program at the Neah Bay School. At the time, Sally was still working and wasn’t sure she’d have time for the required monthly surveys, but Paul was retired, so he decided to join Mary Sue Brancato and Barb Blackie on a COASST survey of Hobuck Beach to find out more. Paul still wasn’t sure dead birds were his thing, but six months later, after Sally retired, the Parkers were out for a walk on Hobuck and spied a beached pelican with tags on it. Sally wondered aloud if they should report the bird, but Paul recognized the color cable ties right away—they were from COASST! With some free time as a new retiree, Sally picked up the COASST protocol and decided to give it a shot. Now she and Paul form the perfect team—he’s the notetaker and photographer, Sally handles the birds.
Sally and Paul initiated COASST surveys at the mouth of the Wa-atch River in the spring of 2007 and have enjoyed watching it change monthly, from cobble to sand and back again. “There’s lots of wrack, and logs are constantly washing in and out. It’s different every month.”
In addition to COASST surveying, the Parkers also
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Peter Linton, steward of the shores on Whidbey
Island, dons his COASST raincoat for a walk
on Ebeys Landing.
collect beach debris for the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. “It’s a way to do a small part for the environment and keep Wa-atch Beach clean.” The next couple of years are sure to be interesting—Neah Bay has already been in the news with the November 2011 discovery of Japanese buoys. As Sally says, “there’s a lot of excitement about the possibility of tsunami debris washing up.”
Paul and Sally also help out at other beaches near Neah Bay—they monitor Sooes South every other month, and Sally joins Janet at Hobuck, one of the North Coast’s “birdiest” beaches, to practice her dead bird identification skills and assist with the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary on-the-beach trainings. And practice she gets! Sally has processed 33 different species. “At first, I was nervous about doing the measurements and my IDs. Now I’m a lot more confident.” And the folks in Neah Bay know it—people call Sally and Paul about birds and other objects they find on the beach. “COASST has been a great way to meet interesting, passionate people. The surveys are always an adventure.”
Peter linton region: Puget sound beaches: ebeys landing, Perego lagoon
Peter Linton was introduced to COASST during a fateful ride on the passenger deck of the ferry from Port Townsend to Whidbey Island. During the ride, Peter ran into some fellow members of the Whidbey Audubon Society returning home from a COASST training session
in Port Townsend. One of them, Bob Merrick, was in need of a survey partner, so Peter agreed to join Bob at Ebeys Landing and Perego Lagoon. Peter took over after Bob moved off Whidbey three years later. After more than nine years, Peter has racked up more than 400 surveys for COASST!
Many of you Puget Sound and San Juan Island COASSTers know that beached birds can be scarce. Over the course of his COASST career, Peter has found a total of only 8 birds. That’s 0.02 birds per survey! “It’s tremendously exciting finding birds. When I find one, I think, I’ve got my year’s quota!” Peter enjoys comparing the trends of different COASST regions in COASST Reports, so he is well-aware of the large numbers of birds that wash in on Lower 48 outer coast beaches, “I hear about the hair-raising events of the outer coast and wonder, how can you deal with that?”
Although his surveys at Ebeys Landing and Perego Lagoon haven’t turned up many beached birds, there is always plenty to keep Peter interested. Subtle changes— an increase in kelp wrack, new driftwood—make each visit new. Peter has become especially fascinated by the timing of crab molts and has been learning to identify species by their carapaces (a new data set for COASST?). But some things never change: “Since the first boats sailed here, the profile of Admiralty Inlet hasn’t changed—it’s the same thing people were looking at hundreds of years ago.”
Always an advocate for COASST, Peter leaves our colorful species cards around town for others to pick up. “Mainlanders often ask what we do on the island,” Peter says, laughing. “Maybe they’ll find a beached bird and get hooked like I did.” When he’s not out walking the beach, Peter spends time tending to his kitchen garden and orchard with his wife Iris. Both are interested in following the birds in their yard and adjacent woods and on the beach! As Peter says, “I’m ever so fortunate to end up here.”
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diane and dave bilderback region: oregon south beach: oregon mile 99
You know you’re a diehard COASSTer when dead birds become a highlight of your vacation. In recounting a recent trip to New Zealand, Diane and Dave Bilderback quip, “Now we always see birds…dead and otherwise.”
Long-time employees at the University of Montana (Diane as an advisor and Dave as a professor), both have a background in botany, but always harbored an interest in marine biology. After their retirement to the Oregon coast in 2003, they decided to “walk as many beaches as possible.” With a goal to learn about the local seaweeds and seagrasses, the Bilderbacks soon found themselves finding all manner of items on their beachcombing expeditions, including beached birds.
Diane and Dave heard about a COASST talk and training session in Florence, but were unable to attend, so what to do? Send Mom! Diane’s mother, Mary Lou Letsom, began surveying Oregon Mile 175 near Florence with Anne Caples, Val Knox and Cindy Burns in September 2005. Diane and Dave decided they should check up on Mom, so they joined the Mile 175 team for a survey. “It was trial by fire!” Diane recounts. “We found 47 birds and it took us 6 hours!” The Bilderbacks weren’t deterred. In fact, they continued to join the Mile 175 team, driving from Bandon to Florence monthly, until they started helping Peter Witschi at a beach closer
to home (Oregon Mile 96). Nowadays, the Bilderbacks monitor Oregon Mile 99, but can still be found helping out at nearby beaches, especially when wrecks occur. Together, Diane and Dave have found over 400 beached birds of 26 different species at Oregon Mile 99, and that doesn’t include their more than 100 refinds. “In Bandon, we’re near large Common Murre rookeries. In good years, we’ll see lots of murres. Now we know it’s a sign of good health.”
Ever willing to combine seabirds with their botanical prowess, Dave and Diane have volunteered for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, helping to assemble herbariums for the Oregon National Wildlife Refuge complex. “On some of the islands, we had to wear snowshoes so we wouldn’t crush the burrow nests.”
“I’ve learned so much about marine birds that I didn’t know before,” says Diane. “When you look at the birds close up, you can see so many details of their bills, feet and wings, all of which help you to understand how each species makes a living.” And they don’t just stop at beached birds. The Bilderbacks also volunteer with the Marine Mammal Stranding Network. Diane jokes that people often say, “if it’s a carcass, the Bilderbacks are interested; and they’re right, I am!” And if you’ve found out about COASST in Coos County, chances are it’s through the Bilderbacks. “Dave and I enjoy doing this together in our retirement. It’s fun, and you meet lots of people with conservation at heart.”
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Dave and Diane Bilderback team up to
investigate one of the hundreds of murres
they’ve found on Oregon Mile 99.
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An aerial view of Elwha West Beach, where the Elwha River empties into the Strait of Juan de Fuca. J. Gusssman
Back in 2010, when the removal of the Elwha Dams upstream of Port Angeles in the Strait of Juan de Fuca was slated for September 2011, scientists and citizens wondered: would beaches change as the tons of accumulated sediment behind the dams moved downstream and into the near-shore? What would birds do? Would debris patterns change?
These were all questions the Clallam County Marine Resources Committee (C-MRC) posed. Citizens, resource managers, tribal members, scientists, educators, and commercial and recreational fishermen join together to form MRCs, promoting marine resource stewardship in 10 of Washington’s coastal counties. Funded by the U.S. Congress in northern Puget Sound through the Northwest Straits Foundation and the Washington State Legislature on the outer coast, the MRCs solicit for proposals which fill specific community needs, including restoration, monitoring, education and outreach. Cathy Lear, C-MRC committee member, emphasizes that the COASST-MRC partnership is an important one, “MRCs care about the same things COASST cares about: people, shorelines, wildlife and good management.”
The removal of the dams, approved by an Act of Congress in 1992, is the largest project of its kind in U.S. history. The hope is to restore 70 miles of historic habitat for native salmon—pink, chum, coho, sockeye and the endangered Puget Sound Chinook. Not surprisingly, it’s captured the attention of hundreds of citizens, scientists, resource managers, reporters, writers and film crews.
Partner ProfileClallam County Marine Resources Committee: Focus on the Elwha
Realizing a need to unite the Elwha’s many stakeholders, Anne Shaffer of the Coastal Watershed Institute put together the Elwha Nearshore Consortium in 2004, which hosts an annual workshop each winter. The Consortium is a big opportunity to bring everyone to the table, “to see, understand and promote the nearshore restoration associated with dam removals,” adds Anne.
With funds from C-MRC, COASST set out to bolster survey coverage in the immediate vicinity of the Elwha River outflow by establishing two new sites in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Thanks to the help of Dan and Lynda Phillips, who survey Crescent Bay, and Dan Lieberman and Tara Morrow from the Olympic Peninsula Skills Center and their students Bahja Huffman, Alexis Olea and Garret Goudie, who collectively survey Elwha West, both sites have yet to miss a single survey since their inception in October 2010.
The new beaches, when combined with data from Tongue Point and Freshwater Bay (both within 15 km of the river mouth), have displayed the basic “Strait” pattern—a weak peak in late summer–early fall (August–September), with ghost peaks in winter (December) and again in spring (April). Essentially the outer coast Lower 48 pattern, only faint. With the dams just coming out now, we’ve only managed to establish the baseline. Stay tuned for shifts as the wild river re-establishes itself.
To learn more about this project and other COASST partner projects, please visit depts.washington.edu/coasst/involved/learnmore.htm.
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With 797 volunteers, 419 beaches, and thousands of carcasses to verify annually, the COASST annual budget has certainly grown. It now takes almost $250,000 to sustain our annual operations, including salary sup-port for our five employees, and all of the travel we do for trainings, socials and presentations. Then there’s the cost of COASST supplies! Very fortunately, our organization runs on much more than cash. Without the 26,236 hours of combined travel and survey time from COASST volunteers and the 4,352 student intern hours, we’d be sunk! Realize that those volunteer contributions are worth a stunning $653,360 according to the federal government. In addition, COASST received in-kind contributions of everything from Julia and Janet’s time, to space for trainings, to cable ties—collectively estimated at an additional $50,000. Foundations supported the Columbia River daily survey project this biennium, while agencies put their money behind trainings and guides for the Observer Program, creating a West Coast wing key, and COASST volunteer supplies, trainings and socials.
COASST would like to thank the sponsors who provided support during 2009–2011:
operational supportLowell A. and Frankie L. Wakefield Professorship
NOAA Fisheries
special ProjectsClallam County Marine Resources Committee
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
NOAA Fisheries
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Washington Sea Grant
in-Kind supportAlaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
Cable Markers Co., Inc.
Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
individual donationsDean and Diane Schwickerath
Grace and Don Wheeler
Tom and Connie Herzig
COASST FundingThanks also to the following people and organizations for supporting COASST surveys, projects, volunteer trainings and evening events, June 2009–May 2011: Jeff Adams, Peg Tillery and Kitsap Beach Naturalists; Glen Alexander and Padilla Bay National Wildlife Refuge; Russel Barsh and Kwiaht; Chrys Bertolotto and Snohomish County Beachwatchers; Patrick Chandler and Jenni Medley and the Center for Alaskan Coastal Studies; Kathy East and Keen-eye birders; David Freed and Clallam County Beachwatchers; Jerry Freilich and Olympic National Park; Jennifer Hagen and Quileute Natural Resources; Jan Hodder and Oregon Institute of Marine Biology; Phillip Johnson and CoastWatch, Oregon Shores; Conservation Coalition; Lynne Jordan and Skagit County Beachwatchers; Lisa Matlock, Carmen Field and Alaska Islands and Oceans Center; Jeff Mow and Kenai Fjords National Park; Patrick Mus and Poulsbo Marine Science Center; Eric Nelson and Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge; Judy Ramos and Yakutat Tlingit Tribe; Penny Rose and Discovery Park; Rose Mary Ryman and Yakutat School District; Jo Schumacker and Quinault Natural Resources; Jon Scordino and Makah Natural Resources; Anne Shaffer and Coastal Watershed Institute; Laura Slater and Alaska Department of Fish and Game; Laurie Spaulding and Friday Harbor Laboratories; Wendy Steffensen and RE Sources; Kate Wynne and Kodiak Area Marine Science Symposium; and Phil Zavadil and St Paul ECO.
F u n d i n G s o u r C e sIn-kind 58% Agencies 23% Foundations 17%Earned Income 1% Private/Corporate Donations 1%
e x P e n s e sVolunteer Training, Communication & Outreach 36% Special Projects 28% Data Verification & Analysis 24% Program Management 8%Fundraising 4%
COASST MissionThe Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team (COASST) is a citizen science project focused on the coastal areas of the North Pacific. COASST believes citizens of coastal communities are essential scientific partners in monitoring marine ecosystem health. By collaborating with citizens, natural resource manage-ment agencies and environmental organizations, COASST works to translate long-term monitoring into effective marine conservation solutions.
Reports 09–11Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey TeamUniversity of Washington School of Aquatic and Fishery SciencesBox 355020 Seattle, WA 98195-5020